Hundreds back Facebook call for Saudi protest

* Demands for ruler and shura council to be elected
* Campaign seeks minimum wage, more rights for women

* Not clear whether protests will materialise

DUBAI, Feb 23 (Reuters) - Hundreds of people have backed a
Facebook campaign calling for a "day of rage" across Saudi
Arabia next month to demand an elected ruler, greater freedom
for women and release of political prisoners.

The page called for a "revolution of yearning" on March 11
in the kingdom, the world's biggest oil exporter and which is
ruled by an absolute monarchy.

More than 460 people had endorsed the page by Wednesday
morning, but it was impossible to verify how many of them were
inside Saudi Arabia or whether any protest would materialise.

Arab uprisings which overthrew leaders in Tunisia and Egypt
were mobilised by youths using social media, but activists in
Saudi Arabia say a recent Internet call for a demonstration in
Riyadh failed to bring anyone onto the streets.

A protest last month in Jeddah after floods swept through
Saudi Arabia's second-biggest city was quickly broken up.

The demands included "that the ruler and members of the
Shura (Consultative) Council be elected by the people" as well
as calls for an independent judiciary, release of political
prisoners and the right of freedom of expression and assembly.

They also sought a minimum wage of 10,000 riyals ($2,700),
greater employment opportunities, establishing a watchdog to
eliminate corruption and cancellation of "unjustified taxes and
fees".

Other requests included rebuilding the armed forces,
reforming Saudi Arabia's powerful and conservative Sunni Muslim
clerics, and "the abolition of all illegal restrictions on
women" in the kingdom.

Despite its oil wealth, Saudi Arabia is grappling with
unemployment that hit 10.5 percent in 2009. It offers its 18
million nationals social benefits but they are considered less
generous than those provided by other Gulf Arab oil producers.

Saudi state television said King Abdullah, returning home on
Wednesday after months of absence for medical treatment, would
grant benefits to Saudis worth billions of riyals.

The measures did not include political reforms in the
absolute monarchy such as fresh municipal elections demanded by
liberals or opposition groups. The kingdom has no elected
parliament and does not tolerate public dissent.
(Reporting by Dominic Evans; Editing by David Stamp)